MAY-JUN 2016 ISSUE

Cost Comparison of a Patient Care Coordinator (PCC) for a Solo Practitioner Surgical Practice

For the right practice, a dedicated patient care coordinator may generate higher levels of return patients, increased levels of patient referral, and decreased turnover of employees.
Cost Comparison of a Patient Care Coordinator PCC for a Solo Practitioner Surgical Practice
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All business ventures must balance costs and benefits. In descending order, the three main costs in medical practice are salary, rent, and advertising. The median staff percentage of expense for a plastic surgery practice calculated by BSM Consulting (2015) is 13 percent to 19 percent.1 A key and necessary role in a plastic surgery office is the patient care coordinator, who effectively acts as the sales closer. This sales role can be fulfilled by hybrid employees who dedicate some time to the patient care sales conversion, or fulfilled by a full-time PCC. A full-time PCC position is a way that plastic surgery has adapted to the financial environment matchin g supply and demand.2 The PCC has an educator role to increase demand, which maintains higher remuneration rates as advised by Krieger and Shaw.3

From DAVinci Plastic Surgery's founding in 2007 until February 2015, a hybrid office manager/patient care coordinator position was used. This proved mostly effective until the hybrid manager moved away from the practice and began working remotely. In the last six months, we have used a hybrid office manager to perform patient care coordinating as a secondary function, as well as staffing a dedicated 28-hour part-time patient care coordinator. Which model is more cost-effective?

Recent staff changes coupled with the increase in key index procedures tracked from 2012-2014, noted in Figure 1 warrant an analysis of this relationship.1 Results were used from this analysis to make a hiring decision. The results could furthermore indicate a model to be repeated in other plastic or cosmetic surgery practices. The demand for dedicated service definitively existed as the practice growth in cosmetic procedures was positive as shown in Figure 1.

This paper examines the cost-effectiveness of the hybrid office manager/patient care coordinator versus a dedicated patient care coordinator in a solo practitioner surgical practice. The research includes practice financial norms extrapolated from an external consulting company and historical practice data.

Three major factors are at play in the decision-making:

  1. The cost of the hybrid office manager versus a dedicated patient care coordinator
  2. The effectiveness of each individual, measured by respective conversion rates
  3. The opportunity cost of one individual over another

Hypothesis. The null hypothesis is that either model will return similar conversions at the same cost. The alternative hypothesis is that PCC will convert more patients at an economically profitable difference.

Results

The hybrid manager cost 5 percent less per hour ($53.92) than the expected cost from regional Bureau of Labor Statistics (2014) data.4 The PCC cost to the practice was 15.6 percent greater per hour ($28.85) than the BSM Consulting (2015) data mean, and within the 75th percentile of said data.1

Figure. Net Collections per FTE Support Staff.1

The hybrid manager completed the workload in 18 hours/week vs. the PCC's 40 hours/week. The additional cost to the practice was $7,072/year. The PCC had conversion rates of 38 percent vs. 33 percent of the hybrid manager as seen in Figure 2.

Because neither the market nor practice was saturated, there existed additional potential growth for conversion. In 2012 there were 149 cosmetic cases, whereas there were 246 cosmetic cases in 2015, equaling a 65 percent increase in demand.5

The opportunity for unconverted cases in 2015 would have been 36 cases due to a differing conversion rate between hybrid manager and dedicated PCC as noted in Figure 2. These 36 cases multiplied by an average of $7,000 per case results in a $252,000 gross income increase per year. The net profit ratio would normally be 39 percent or $98,280. The cost of the PCC salary was $7,072, giving a net opportunity cost of $91,208.

Discussion

The demand for cosmetic surgery continues to increase in practice as predicted by Steven Miller.6 It is important to maximize employee productivity to remain competitive, something in which DAVinci Plastic Surgery excels, as seen in Figure 3.

Although a PCC requires more hours to complete the role than the more experienced hybrid manager, the net additional costs are negated by the increased conversion rate and productivity during surgery with higher remuneration.1

Non-quantifiable variables may also play a valuable role in the assessment of PCC practice need. A dedicated patient care coordinator may generate higher levels of return patients, increased levels of patient referral, and decreased turnover of employees due to reduced stressors and strain on hybrid personnel. This position is also able to adapt to evolving customer practices and may improve email response time to web inquiry consultations. As referral sources graduate more and more to online sources, they can manage the messages. While it is early in the DAVinci Plastic Surgery PCC transition process, the first crossover month showed a 60% increase and the first full month a 67 percent increase in booking.1

Conclusion

  • Hours: The PCC requires more time at 40 hours per week versus 18 hours per week for the hybrid manager.
  • Cost: The PCC is cheaper at $28.85 per hour verses $53.92 per hour, but more expensive by $7,072 per year.
  • Conversion: The PCC conversion rate of 38 percent versus 33 percent adds $91,000 to the bottom line.

A dedicated PCC was an appropriate DAVinci Plastic Surgery full-time equivalent hire. This change was implemented, and in the first full month of a dedicated PCC there was a 67 percent increase in bookings. Similar cosmetic practices may want to make the same investment to improve conversion rates and resultant bottom line profit.

The authors have no financial interest to declare in relation to the content of this article.

Is a PCC right for your practice? Download the Modern Aesthetics App to read commentary from experts on the role of PCCs and the potential ROI. Then Tweet us @ModAesthetics to let us know what you think.

1. Business Management Consulting. Financial Summary and Procedure Analysis. Incline Village: BSM Consulting. 2015.

2. Krieger L.M., Lee G.K. The Economics of Plastic Surgery Practices: Trends in Income, Procedure Mix, and Volume. Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery. 2004; 114(1): 192-199.

3. Krieger L.M., Shaw W.W. The Effect of Increased Consumer Depend on Fees for Aesthetic Surgery: An Economic Analysis. Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, 1999; 104 (7): 2312-2317.

4. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2014-2015 Edition, Medical and Health Service Managers: U.S. Deptartment of Labor. 2014.

5. NexTech Medical Practice Management. Conversion Rates of Patient Coordinator. Nextech Systems LLC. September 30, 2015.

6. Miller S.H. Competitive Forces and Academic Plastic Surgery. Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, 1998; 101(5): 1389-1399.

Consulted Source

Bailey, B. Does Your Practice Need a Patient Care Coordinator? Modern Aesthetics. July/August 2015; 3(4): 52-54.

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